Moving from
to

Complete relocation analysis: taxes, real prices, quality of life, and what salary to ask for.

The verdict

Sweden is 15% more expensive. Tax rate goes from 29.8% to 33.6%.

Tax Comparison

At $37,769 USD equivalent gross salary

🇮🇹 Italy

Gross€34,650
Income Tax-€6,813
Social-€3,531
Net€24,307
Effective Rate29.8%

🇸🇪 Sweden

Grosskr393,427
Income Tax-kr104,585
Social-kr27,540
Netkr261,302
Effective Rate33.6%

Net difference: $1,409/year in Sweden.Full calculator →

What Things Actually Cost

Price Index: Italy = 89, Sweden = 102 (US = 100)

🍔

Big Mac

$5.20$5.80
+12%

Starbucks Tall Latte

$4.20$5.00
+19%
🍺

Beer 500ml (bar)

$6.00$8.00
+33%
📱

iPhone 16 128GB

$900.00$920.00
+2%
🎬

Netflix Standard (monthly)

$12.99$13.00
0%

1L Gasoline (95)

$1.90$1.90
0%
🚇

Single Transit Ticket

$2.00$3.50
+75%
🏠

Airbnb Studio (city center)

$85.00$100.00
+18%
See all 30 products →

What Salary to Ask For

If you earn €34,650 gross in Italy ($37,769USD), here's what you need in Sweden depending on your goal:

Same net income (tax only)

kr416,807

You keep the same $26,494/yr net in both countries. But Sweden taxes 3.9% more.

Same purchasing power (recommended)

kr477,689

Accounts for the fact that Sweden is 15% more expensive than Italy. This is the number to negotiate.

Calculate with your exact salary →

Frequently Asked Questions

How much tax do I save moving from Italy to Sweden?
The effective tax rate changes from 29.8% in Italy to 33.6% in Sweden. You keep about $1,409.24 less per year in Sweden.
Is Sweden cheaper to live in than Italy?
No. Sweden is about 15% more expensive across 30 everyday products. Budget accordingly.
What salary do I need in Sweden to match my lifestyle in Italy?
Use our salary calculator to find the exact amount. It accounts for income tax, social contributions, and cost of living differences between Italy and Sweden. As a rule of thumb: you need a higher gross salary because Sweden is more expensive.
Is it worth moving from Italy to Sweden?
It depends on your priorities. The financial difference is small. Consider quality of life, climate, healthcare, and personal factors.